Skip to content

Additional resources for earning interest in gold

5 responses to “Irredeemable Currency De-tooths Savers, Report 18 Feb 2018”

  1. There is another side to those who convert their dollars to gold, (though I agree that it just makes the gold seller a dollar holder), and that is political. By converting one’s dollars to gold, one is in essence saying, “I’m taking my ball home and not going to play.” There is no impact by one person de-dollaring as it just means that someone else, (the gold seller), has “dollared-up”. But at least one is a) sheltered him/herself from dollar risk and b) made a statement, (even if only to oneself), that one does not support the idea, (nor the practice) of dealing in debt, (FRNs) with no duration and no interest paid, an abomination if I ever heard of one). (See, I have been paying attention, prof!)

    I presume that makes one simply a “hoarder”, (as opposed to a speculator). (I say that like it’s a bad thing, huh?) But for many it is more of getting to those golden years that one is less inclined to subject one’s savings to a broader market that seems to allow wide spread financial crime, (the victim invariably being the small saver), to proliferate and when caught, punished lightly with no remediation for losses to the saver. As I like to say sardonically, “Free Jon Corzine!”

    As far as the “Declining Workforce Participation” goes, there are many who are still generating an income but they are “declining” to participate in the fraudulent government tracking of their endeavors. Every president since I would say LBJ has cooked the government employment numbers books to be able to crow about some imaginary goal post they had achieved. All one has to do to see this tomfoolery is look how many people fell off the books when they gubbmint unemployment checks ran out. The didn’t become employed, they just weren’t counted anymore. This farce continues to this day. I digress but just to point out that the same government that is cooking the unemployment books is also dealing in fraudulent FRNs.

    I get that one isn’t going to drive that mean ol’ Uncle Sam out of the business of dealing in crap scrip. But one does have the choice to a) get out of the debt racket and b) hold their savings in Money, not debt instruments with no duration. Thanks Keith. You make me a wiser man.

  2. Excellent article. One of your conclusions is:
    “The driver since 1981 has been interest rates > marginal productivity.”
    A question I have is, can an increase in default risk increase the rate of interest?

    1. The interest rate rises when the marginal bond is sold at its bid. If the proceeds find a productive capital asset with more yield than the old rate, they’ll buy that (at its ask), thereby driving the marginal yield on capital down. The trades here are effectively at an ‘equal’ relation. Still the dollars themselves just come around again and when at rest they tend to buy more bonds, which undoes the initial upward force. Only an affirmative move into hoarding causes real increase in the interest rate. The quantity of hoardable cash is a small fraction of the dollars on deposit, and it’s an asset class under outright assault in the ‘war on cash’.
      The question is whether the FED selling the bond and then destroying the cash proceeds is tantamount to ‘redeeming’ the currency or ‘extinguishing the debt’. The Fed is betting that such ‘Quantitative Tightening’ will suffice. Thus far they’ve mostly let bonds mature away. Not clear whether principal repaid is being written off of their balance sheet or recirculated, They could have some effect, no doubt; but $3T seems puny compared to the $20-30T outstanding. We shall see.

  3. Have you noticed the recent budget “negotiations”?

    Party A) Yes, let’s drive off the cliff as fast as we can. Nothing bad will happen.
    Party B) No, that’s crazy… let’s drive off the cliff ever faster while “helping people”. Besides, nothing bad ever happens. This is America… we are invincible!

    Notice the difference?

Leave a Reply

Want to join the discussion?

Feel free to contribute!

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.